If my parents had left me millions of dollars, I doubt I’d have overlooked it.
Instead, they left me something far more valuable — and I had overlooked that inheritance for most of my life. At least consciously.
My family was anything but a model of stability and mental health. My father suffered from what I now know was narcissistic personality disorder. My mother left us when I was 5 years old and drifted in and out of my life for years afterward. I’ve written extensively about both of those realities because they shaped me in profound ways — rarely for the better.
But life has a way of refusing to fit neatly into the categories we’d prefer. The same parents who left me with painful memories also left me with an inheritance that has quietly benefited me every day of my adult life.
Neither of them left me wealth. They left me something much harder to recognize because it became so completely woven into my daily life that I stopped noticing it.

Industrial age relic: Do companies pay for your time or your brain?
Ignore the happy face it presents: Coercive state points a gun at you
People who invoke ‘fairness’ generally just mean, ‘Do things my way — or else’
An emotional vampire craves you, but he doesn’t know how to love
Young New Yorkers say they’re fleeing the city — Why? High taxes, low opportunities
How can a child process seeing his mother trying to stab father?
Little boy for whom I was named shows what my mother hoped for